--- name: hook description: Create retention-optimized opening hooks for any content type. Extends curiosity from title/headline, prevents common opening mistakes, and maximizes early engagement. --- # Hook Creation ## Overview This skill provides concrete requirements and proven patterns for creating opening hooks that retain audience attention, extend title/headline curiosity, and maximize engagement. The opening content is critical for retention across all platforms — video, email, and social. **Core Principle**: The opening must EXTEND the curiosity created by the title/headline, not repeat or waste it. The audience already engaged based on the title's promise. The opening must ADD new intrigue and make them MORE interested. ## When to Use Use this skill when: - Planning new content and need to design the opening hook - Reviewing an existing opening for engagement optimization - The user asks for help with retention, early drop-off, or opening strategy - Creating content that requires strong audience engagement from the start - Analyzing why content has poor early engagement metrics ## Content Type Resolution Before creating hooks, determine the content type and load the appropriate platform-specific reference file: | Content Type | Reference File | Opening Format | |---|---|---| | YouTube video | `references/youtube-hooks.md` | First 5-15 seconds of video | | Newsletter | `references/newsletter-hooks.md` | First paragraph / preview text | | Social post | `references/social-hooks.md` | First line / hook tweet | **MANDATORY**: Read the relevant reference file before creating hooks. These references contain platform-specific patterns, timing requirements, and forbidden patterns. If the content type does not match any reference file, apply the universal principles below and adapt to the format. ## Critical Requirements ### 1. Curiosity Extension (CRITICAL) Opening content MUST build upon the intrigue from the title/headline, never repeat it. **CORRECT Example:** - Title: "Teach Your Cat 5 Tricks in 10 Minutes" - Opening: Rapid preview montage of impressive tricks in action - Audience thinks: "I can teach my cat ALL of that in only 10 minutes?!" **INCORRECT Example:** - Title: "Teach Your Cat 5 Tricks in 10 Minutes" - Opening: "Today we're going to look at 5 tricks you can teach your cat in 10 minutes" - Audience thinks: "I know. Get on with it." The opening must make the audience MORE interested than when they engaged. Attention must INCREASE, not drain. ### 2. Direct Content Connection (MANDATORY) Opening content MUST directly relate to the title/headline promise. **Rules:** - NO unrelated tangents or side stories in the opening - NO delayed starts where main content appears much later - Content must be tightly connected to the promised value - If additional context is needed, it must come AFTER the hook is established ### 3. Forbidden Opening Patterns These patterns are DISQUALIFYING violations across all content types: #### 3.1 DO NOT Repeat the Title (FORBIDDEN) Never restate what the title already communicated. The audience already has this information. Repetition drains attention. #### 3.2 DO NOT Greet Before Hooking (FORBIDDEN) Never start with greetings, welcomes, or introductions before the hook. Greetings are acceptable AFTER the initial hook is established. - Bad: "Hi everyone, welcome back..." - Bad: "Hey what's up, thanks for clicking..." - Bad: "In this issue, we'll cover..." #### 3.3 DO NOT Start with Unrelated Content (FORBIDDEN) Never open with tangents, stories, or content disconnected from the title/headline promise. Audience confusion triggers abandonment. ## Effective Opening Hook Patterns Use one of these proven hook structures: ### Pattern A: Preview/Teaser Show a brief glimpse of the payoff before diving into the full content. **Creates thought**: "I need to know how to do that!" or "I need to read this." Works best for: Educational content, tutorials, how-to guides. ### Pattern B: Intrigue Escalation Add surprising context that makes the promise MORE compelling than the title alone. **Example**: Title about a technique -> Open with "What I'm about to show you took professionals years to discover, but you'll learn it in 60 seconds." **Creates thought**: "This is even better than I expected!" Works best for: Expert content, reveals, insider knowledge. ### Pattern C: Problem Amplification Immediately validate why the audience needs this content by amplifying the problem. **Example**: Title about mistakes -> Open with "If you're doing [X], you're losing [specific bad outcome]." **Creates thought**: "I need to fix this now!" Works best for: Problem-solving content, mistake-avoidance content. ### Pattern D: Immediate Value Demonstration Jump straight into delivering on the promise. No preamble, just results. **Creates thought**: "This is exactly what I came for!" Works best for: Tactical content, quick tips, high-value insights. ## Hook Creation Workflow When creating or reviewing opening hooks, follow this workflow: 1. **Review title/headline** — Understand what curiosity was created 2. **Identify the escalation** — How can the opening make it MORE intriguing? 3. **Choose hook pattern** — Which structure (A/B/C/D) best serves the content? 4. **Draft opening content** — Create the opening section 5. **Apply verification checklist** — Ensure all requirements are met 6. **Test against forbidden patterns** — Ensure none of the 3 forbidden patterns are present ## Voice Application Before finalizing any written output, invoke the `writing:voice` skill to apply voice rules. Hooks should reflect the user's authentic voice, not generic copywriting language. ## Brand Compliance When creating assets for The AI Launchpad, invoke `branding-kit:brand-guidelines` to resolve the correct design system and check anti-patterns. ## Quality Verification Checklist Before finalizing any opening hook, verify ALL of these: - [ ] **Non-Repetition Test**: Does this opening avoid repeating the title? (Must be YES) - [ ] **Curiosity Extension Test**: Does this make the audience MORE curious than the title alone? - [ ] **Direct Connection Test**: Is this immediately related to what the title promised? - [ ] **No Greeting First Test**: Does this avoid greetings before the hook? (Must be YES) - [ ] **Attention Increase Test**: Will this INCREASE audience attention, not drain it? - [ ] **Engagement Validation Test**: Does this confirm the audience made the right choice engaging? - [ ] **Platform Timing Test**: Does this meet the platform-specific timing/length requirements? ## Common Failure Patterns ### Pattern 1: The Friendly But Empty Greeting ``` Bad: "Hi everyone, welcome! Thanks so much for being here..." ``` **Problem**: Drains attention before value is delivered. ### Pattern 2: The Exact Repetition ``` Bad: Title: "5 AI Agent Patterns" Opening: "Today I'm showing you 5 AI agent patterns" ``` **Problem**: Audience already knows this. No new information. ### Pattern 3: The Meandering Start ``` Bad: Title: "Amazing Coding Hack" Opening: "So I was browsing GitHub yesterday and I saw this interesting repo and it reminded me of..." ``` **Problem**: Takes too long to get to the promised content. ### Pattern 4: The Over-Explanation ``` Bad: "Before we get started, let me explain why this is important and give you some background on..." ``` **Problem**: Delays the payoff. Audience loses patience. ## Critical Success Factors **Priority Order (highest to lowest):** 1. DO NOT repeat the title (instant failure if violated) 2. Extend curiosity beyond the title/headline 3. Connect directly to promised content 4. DO NOT greet before hooking 5. Meet platform-specific timing/length requirements **CRITICAL**: If the opening repeats the title, greets before hooking, or starts with unrelated content, the hook has FAILED regardless of other qualities. These are disqualifying violations.